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RE: This Proposal Is An Attack On SBD... Sound The Alarm!

in #sbd8 years ago

I agree, and it's why I'm a fan of the SBD (though a little selfishly sad the interest rate has gone down, though I do get the reasoning behind it).

As to it being too hard to fix, I don't know about that. If a marketplace with STEEM (as an example) didn't work out, I'm not sure why they wouldn't be able to re-introduce SBD? I'm talking about something I have very little experience on here, and I know you have been very active in supporting the peg. If you feel even discussing this is reason to raise an "alarm" then I'm misunderstanding something.

basically harmless

Debt always creates some risk. Not too long ago @bacchist was freaking out (from perspective) on the amount of debt being too high and encouraging people to burn their SBD and/or go full SP on payouts.

At some point it seems to me like every change (even a discussion of a change) creates dramatic alarms. That's too emotionally charged for my tastes. Discussing ideas is a good thing, and we should encourage ideas and changes while the platform is small, and mistakes are easily fixable. If we get things wrong, it won't matter anyway because the platform won't grow to the point where enough people really care.

Either way, thanks for chiming in, @smooth. As I've said before, I greatly appreciate the work you've done to make the SBD peg work.

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As to it being too hard to fix, I don't know about that. If a marketplace with STEEM (as an example) didn't work out, I'm not sure why they wouldn't be able to re-introduce SBD?

Because it would be much farther along with more competing interests and justifiable reasons to not want to make major changes. That is the nature of these systems as they mature, as you pointed out in your comment above. Keeping an undefined "beta" label on it indefinitely does not resolve that issue.

Not too long ago @bacchist was freaking out

Take that in context along with "sound the alarm!"

That said, what was the debt ratio when that was happening? I suspect a lot higher, in which case freaking out may have been somewhat reasonable. We've learned a lot about how to manage the risks, including taking action well before the debt level reaches the previous high levels (as was not done previously), and I'm convinced now that it is quite manageable. Yes not zero cost or risk as you correctly pointed out, but quite low.